RandySBreth, for wacky rigging Senkos, I put a wire weedguard on Octopus hooks.
I use 7 strand stainless steel leader material, a short piece of 1/8" electrical shrink tubing, and a little heat.
No fly tying vise or skill needed. It takes a few seconds to assemble it.
I use a 3/0 Gamakatsu Octopus #02413 for Trick worms and a 2/0 Gamakatsu Octopus #02412 or a 2/0 Owner Mosquito for finesse worms.
About 90% of the bass I catch are with that presentation.
fishfordollars, a friend of mine in Texas just got the LSS-1 for his HDS-7 and now wishes he had gotten a larger screen so he could get the multi-view screen of all the available scan screens and 2D sonar.
You may want to do some research of the features you would like to have before you decide between the 7 and 8.
He just sent me a screen shot of the down scan of a bridge at Fork---
I don't see any advantage either, if I don't use an internal weight in the worm, I add a 20# fluorocarbon leader for weight to make braid sink when I wacky rig.
6mile, do you reverse your line to get longer life and do you use a backing to get more reel fills per line spool?
The 7:1 ratio is good for presentations that don't use the reel for the retrieval of the lure, but only take up slack when the lure is worked with the rod. They are also used for low resistant lures such as lipless crankbaits.
ArticCat500, the temp sensor on a transducer will read the boat hull temp if you mount it as a shoot thru. Eventually the boat hull will equal the water temp, but you may not want to wait that long as you move about checking for the water temp. Most anglers prefer to get the actual water temp. and a quicker response time.
The shoot-thru transducers are the trolling motor mount types and can be acquired with or without the temp sensor. You can also mount the transom transducers as shoot-thru also.
Any GPS unit with a plotter screen can be used to save waypoints, trails, and routes. The map software just overlays the maps on the plotter screen. The Humminbird units have a basic background map and the Lowrance handheld H2O has a background map also, some other units may have it included too.
I have an old Eagle handheld that is just a plotter with no map capability and it will get me from point A to B and back just as well as the newer units.
I have the -50 Sorels also. They are fine for just sitting, but will make your socks migrate to your toes if you walk in them much.
The best sock system is a silk or poly sock liner with a high content wool sock over them. The liner will not absorb moisture and will transfer sweat to the wool and keep the moisture away from your skin. If you leave your boots lightly laced, the moisture will wick out of the top and dissipate.
The Hotmaps Premium East has the same contours and spot soundings as the GMCO paper maps of the Potomac and Chesapeake Bay. I have the 2006 and 2009 editions and also have the Hotmaps Explorer on my laptop. I Just checked the 2009 edition and it shows contours out to about 10 miles off the coast at some zoom levels
The original "original" Chatterbaits had good components. After the company was sold by the inventors, the hooks used are junk. If the package is blister packed and not an envelope, then it is NOT an "original" but the original design.
The best copy of the original I have used is the one sold in the *** store which has quality components.
edited: I forgot to mention that the original Rad Lures Chatterbait does not have "Original" on the package.
Thai, many 8# plus bass have been caught by shore anglers fishing beside the original parking lot/ramp near the dam (where the handicap pier is now). Also several each year are caught from the boat dock at the 701 ramp. I know a guy that caught one over 12# from that dock this year.
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